Newspapers / Hillsboro Recorder (Hillsborough, N.C.) / Nov. 24, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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WE'LL HEW TO, THE LINE, LET THE CHIPS, 'FALL WHERE, THEY- MAY.. w ". VOL. I. IIILLSBOKQ,'; -N, i C THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 24, - 1887; NO. 16. i " There arenow cables on almost every tea'and ocean bed, the total length of wlrehiid being nearly 11 8, 000 nautical mijcaj TLcr$ nre nine cables connecting Europe with America, the flrstTthat was laid dating from 1858, ' Eo great, also, has the advance been In the operative as pect of cable telegraphy that practically no more difficulty la felt in repairing sub marine? llnWthnn'ln attending to defect! In thoso on land. ; It aeldom any eri- oua derangement -of telegraphic system takes place. "When it does it ia of com. oarativcly brief durty, : ' r ,- , " ' x- - . An old traveler declares that European traveling U much leca sociable and cheer ful than If was, iHasays:,,The French .man's tongue is tied; the German no longer instructs us with his vast erudi tion and complacent affability; the Eng. llHhmaa no longer comports himself as . if every one were glad, to meet him, and as if it were every one's 'duty to answer his questions ar.d supply his wants. Frenchmen, Germias an J English live vs by side in tho same house, walk in J tlbe nme paths, lounge on tlw same vcr inda and ait around tho came fire, as though utterly Unconscious of the pres ence of Wb. other,- without betraying '7 a srcjrl, look or gesture that they ob serve their fellow-creature around them." . I ' - . 1-- -- , ; : k The Suprieme Court chamber at Wash iogton .waglvn over to frescocrs the j-t ummer, an -was : i barren ttnd slcsaate place -enough. Duaty white lwps t-hroudod the busts of dead-and- Vm Chief Justices in the niches around . tho semi-circular walla, the flnnra m bare, ami the high heat h looked cold and lonely. Scaffoldings held th psin ters to their work up under the high -ung.; a me goimy-iooxing uieiKs vlcsk was locked up the famous court Bible, an Oxford edition of 1799, first ucd when the court came to Wa-hington U ISOi . Since then aery President has kiwi it at his inauguration, and every ItiUf and Associate Justice has been sworn in upon it Just to the north of M the main chamber is the triangular .room ."' in which Moore placed his first telegraph - Instrument and-.rfcclvc4.the first mcs age sent ovct the wire. . It camo fniui a lield station ' at Bla lensburg, ait miles wsy. ' , ..,... . "- - - At Eastern paper ; says that the Uetlakalla Indians, driven from tho lminioi of Canada by the inequalities tt the" land laws there, which have put their little Territory at tho merry of t-n,l mt.t.. . t t 1 . Immigration to Alaska. I'nder the prvjsent land laws, or absence of them, In Alaska the Industrious Mctlakatlans liavt nt guarantee ol the! security . of their new homes, but prevalent interest la eat great Northwest territory will un doubtedly lead to legislation on the sub ject in the nesr future, and the agitation of the wrongs of the MetUkatla people . and the general sympathy with them re 'smtt in a secure title to the land they 'propose to occupy. Annette Wand is the spot selected, and the advance boiy bad ady Incited their in August. Tho progress of th- Ind ana In civilization ss one of 1ho most encouraging incidents tf the ho!e Ind'an question, an.I their advent to Alaska will introduce an etc- tnent of va'uj int J the industrial eJuca lloaoftheaativca.1 w f THE "WORLD OYER," 5 f ; j Liberty will soon illumin te the world from the western a well ai the eastern aide : of the rontinent. Adolph Entro, the mining millionaire, ia erecting her 'statue on Mount Olympis, la San Fran- i rir. The figure was sculptured by WiciU,a Belgian artist, and bar tiled it Trinmph Jt It lum'ert, the triumph of light, and said it was made tore present light triumphing over darkness liberty ow tyranny and deotism.w Sutro saw it exhibited at Antwerp and Mi In love with it ' It Is ma le of arti llclal sron, a iwed up into fourteen pieces, and in that shape impoitcl Inta the county. It Is1 SI - feet h"g!l, aud will stand on a 1-Vfnt pcldiral, ahllo the ' inotintaln tindif It Is tOO feet high. CalifuroUns count in the mounla'a, and in all 1U altitude I0 ft It has taken two ' weeks to build the pe.lettat, two weeks nan will stick the art ill ial rock ogrthv, anl the gre; t work will be done. The light in the uplifted ton h of the flgtire will Iw eVtrlc, and of 16,000 raadle power. It will illuminate a park, and can I e seen from the bay, whilo Willionnlre fiutro can sit at his parlof windows in the evening and see how great a public benefactor he U. Iff Wasn't Aaxlons H)h. Mi!" "mid Mrs. Smith, tear, fully, "ma bascit her thumb dreadfully and the doctor says there's danger of lotkiaw." Me needn't be afraid of tha'," re plied Pmiih, sarcastically: she'll never (rive it a clisace la lo k."-vVsr4 Am. r.TlTOME OF THE lXTEIlBSTItta " SEWS OF TE' DAK'- '"' The I r lull Ti'oiililri f.abr Acllttloa Every ' wlirre-WhnS la DoIdr North, Ki M'eatai d AeroMtka Hcas. v Tho'psoking houso xf tho Ilancock chemical works, Mich., was blown up and six men killed. r Fourteen persons were killed by an ex plosion ia a coal mine at Grcisunan, near Dortmund, Germany. f ; ,hju Peru, Ind.J the station agent of tho Chicago & AtUutic Ttuilroad discovered a dynamite bomb in a a freight car. , The reported marriage ef Class Louise Kellogg to Carl Strakosch is confirmed, tbe lady herself admitting the fact. Rev. Dr. Francis L. Bat ton, professor of geology, at Princeton collcse, N.' J., will succeed Dr. MtCosb as president of that institution. ' Notices have been posted In County Clurc, Ireland, orderiug u boycott of the Shannon steamship company for convey ing prisoners to Larick jail. ' ' At a meeting of the church society of Plymouth church, BrookIyn,N. Y.,it was voted to extend a call to Rev. Charles Berry,' f Wolvcrhaimon, England. Gen, Joseph ilawley, Uuited States Senator, of Conmelicuit was married at Philadelphia, Pa., to Miss Edith Horner, of .England, who has been for several years one of the head nurses at Blockley hospital in that city, i It ia reported in Rome that the Pope has entirely disapproved tho lawlessness and political fanaticism of people in Ire land, and Las sent Instructions to the clergy with refcreuce to their future atti tude regarding the, relations between landlords and tenants. ' - . One of the steel cruiser Atlanta s large anchors was lost at Newport, R. I., tho pin to the shackling slipping out. A diver at the torpedo station was sent for. One of tbe flagship Richmond's big an chors was lost in the same' way a few week a ago,.and it has not been recov ered. -'?.," ! - The anarchists of New York city held meetings in several places to give vent to their fix lijigs concerning the execution of their comrades at Chicago. At one of the meetings Hcrr Most threatened vcu gcaace iu his most blustering manner. One of the meetings was dispersed by the police oa account of its disorderly character. 5j , " - t C-T. fj The Nausatuck Agitate; in t'onnccli cut, a weekly paper run in the interest of tbe Labor party and managed by 1L C. Baldwin, came out with reversed column rules in sympathy with the dead AnarchUta. The stockholders at. once I eld a meeting and voted to put the con cern in the hands of a receiver. It is thought at Bangor, Me., that the suicido af Frcdricksburg. Vs., whose name was given as "C. Ward," in the morning papers, was Jacob Sterns, an cx tenTve fancy goods dealer, of Bangor, who failed Some weeks ego and was ar rested for alleged forgery and fraud. Ilia photograph has been sent to Fred ricks burg. ' - Private advices show that the recently discovered gold mine, ten miles . from Prcscott Arixona, on the Lasiuyampa river, is richer by far than anything ever discovered in the world. The ore aver ages $1,000 per ton, and thousands of tona are In sight Two men' with a common mortar pounded out $S00 in less than an hour. 'I ho gold clings to the rocks in the purest scales. A man with a knife can Kale of a handful in a few minutes. . n . ... A fire in Brooklyn, X. Y., destroyed a station of Culver's Proicct Park & Coney Island Railroad, sUbh-s of the Vandcr bilt Avenue horse car line, a large quan tity of feed and rolling stock and 157 horses. Owing to the iuflammablo nature of the building and contents, the fire spread rapidly and soon destmyed the building and also two brick dwellings on tbe opposite side of Ninth avenue. ThU Is the third time within a year and a half it has been fired. Loss f 200,000. Rev. James W. Saul, I). I)., vice-president of the Universal Peace Tnion, ilid at the Episcopal hospital in Philadelphia, Pa., aged SO years. He was a native of Pennsylvania, but e: tied dawn early in lire in New Orleans, following mercan tile pursuits there for je irs. He filled mimlwr of public municipal places in New Orleans and wa tcmWrt-d but de clined, the Federal o Hires of suptrintend ant of mint, an i nsaitant treasurer of the United Stale. There is much interest still muiifcstcd In the Imported littiwr question in Au gusts, Mr. Burns is selling his imported goods openly at the mnh end of Water trtct, disposing of a large quantity, aud the prohibitory last is nullified piactically. It wdl perhaps be years before a decision is obtained frm thi courts, mid a most determined cfTort is to be imnlc nt the coming scas tn of C.mgress to obtain the enactment of a section which shall pre vent clashing between thn United State customs regulations and the state prohib Itoiy law. i Marshal Dyer, recently appointed n cciver to Inks chsrge of certain prt-iK-rty IttUmtilng to the Mormon church, nudu de nt ind tho othe r day for Teniple Mock, on hit h stands the Mormon temple, as-rm-bly hall and the largn tabrrnm lo iu Salt Lake :ity, Ulnh. Theso buildings and a Ijiiecnt grounds have been used up v aids of forty years exclusively for religious ftirM-). He also took posM'siun of the parsonage known as the Ounrd house and thn church historian's office, luavirg nil n in charge. A demand was fmllier made for all Ih-oks, papers, securities htid other cr thai chiireii rrojKjrty. WASHINGTON1 ITEMS. riCTVRES OF TIIE DOIUCIS AT THE NATIOSAL CAPITAL. - Hie nrpnrtmenu Getting DosvatPlM Again Th Nation's Flnanees-Appnlnta , Menu and KeMoVals-Pensaaln, FI8II CAB FOB GEOnOIA. ' The Commissioner of Agriculture, Hon, . T. Henderson, has been notified by U, Assistant Fish- Commissioner, w. McDonald, that he would leave Wash ington with a supply of carp f6r appli cants in Georgia, aud thst he would alsif j bring 15,000 scale carp with which it is proposed to stock the river basins of that : state. Tho streams and points at which the ."finny foreigners" will be introduced into those waters will be fixed upon after consultation with Gov. Gordon and Com missioner Henderson. ' OATHEniKO OF THE CLASS. A good number of Congressmen are in the city and their ranks are being recruit ed duily by new arrivals. They belong mostly to tbe contingent who live . in boarding houses and at small hotels and who come early to arrange their quarter! for the coming session. It is very gen erally understood that the congressional sessions are the harvest times for Wash ington, Board that would cost an or dinary person $30 per month at ordinary times, costs these extraordinarv Individ uals 75, and in some coses $100, and they pay it without a murmur, as the price assessed against their prominence, MAIL MATTERS. The annual report of T. E. Nash, gen eral superintendent of the railway mail service, shows that to handle the mails while in transit there were employed on railroad routes 4,403, and on steamboat routes 57 railway postsl clerks, being a total of 4.4C0 men. While in the per formanco of their dufy, postal clcrka on railroads traveled (in crews) 107,063,643 miles, and those employed on steamboats, 1,803,747 miles. During thejyear, rail way postal clerks distributed 5,834,090, 875 pieces of ordinary mail matter, and protected, recorded, receipted for, and dispatched 15,753,808 registered packagea and cases, and 930,013 through registered pouches and iuner registered districts. I . "DBtVES WELLS" DEFEATED. What is known as the "driven well patent," which hss been several times be fore the United States supreme court, and which has always heretofore been sus tained, vas declared invalid in an opin ion by Justice Blatchford, based upon the record in case number sixteen, An drew Green and others against George Hovey, brought by appeal from the United Slates circuit court for the south ern district of Iowa. This cottrt holds thnt the fact is now made to appear for the first time in "driven well" litigation that tbe invention was used in- public at Coitland, New York, by others than Green, more than two years before the application for patent was made, is fatal to the patent's validity. The decree of of the circuit court ia favor of the al leged Infringer, Hovey, is affirmed. , I Kortx .,. (' Commissioner 8parks received from the President a letter accepting his resig nation to take effect nt once. The Acting Secretary of Treasury ap pointed Samuel Taylor to be inspector ol hulls of steam vessels at Mobile, Ala. Land Commissioner Sparks personally delivered to the President a long letter, defending his course iu the Chicajro, St Paul. Minneapolis & Omaha lUilway land case and formally resigning his office, T. e Acting Secretary of the Treasury rpjHiiuted guagers and storikecHTS aa follows: Kfchord L. Harris, fifth district of North Carolina; John T. Cnnnady, f1xth district Of Virginia; W. O. Ilnuser, fifth dhtrict of North Carolina. Secretary Lamnr said to a re porter when aked if Lo would accept nomination to tho Supreme Court bench: if President Cleveland sees fit t ten dr me tho nomination, I will acfept the apiKiintmeut at tho greatest honor of my life" An official lift of the members of the next House of Representatives shows th.t ' tue house will C'rtimst of ICS democrats, 153 icpublicans and 4 independents. The irideMidcnts are Anderson, of lows; Nichols, of North Carolina; llopklus, of Virginia, and Smith, of Wisconsin. Don M. Dickinson sent a dispatch to the President from lH-troit, Mich., saying that he would neccirt thep t-ofiW port f)li if the Senate would unanimously ci'Utlr.u him; MhcrwUo he would not. Senator Palmer says he has no doubt that the S. n ilo will uuaniinously confirm the nomination. ' Surgeon General Hamilton has received a telegram from Dr. Porter, at Tampa, Florida, saying that there was one new case of yellow fever and no deaths. He ids,, inquire. if he could oflVr govern ment aid In cose the fever should break out in any town or in any of tbe neigh boring Counties. W. C.T. TJ. nt;nt i.atim itr jooi heiutw. Articles for the Incorporation ol the Dry Goods Credit Guaiantee and Indem nity Company, with a capital of I,WW, 000, have Imtt ft cd ai'.h the insurance department of New V rk slot. The put pose of the comp.ny ism protect tnvrcjiauts and minuinrtitrcrs agnbst any l from dehts owed ihcm by cti-io-nicrs. Tho comptnj will protw t itself by obtaining from a?inisde-lrinittcdit such security r.s t'.u-y t an give, e ther by imntnga on n nl tslat.' or pcrs mal prop crty, r deposit of other Nctnil.V. Tliw company is said to bo vi fimt of its kind organized in the woild. Silas Wltlard 8nyi Wamnn Pffre U : 1 . tin lUsd.Mnlden rirUrbUlaa. ' The National Woman's Christian Tem perance Union met at Nashville, Tenn., with representatives from almost every stato and territory. . For the first tlm: Indian Territory hos sent its representa tive. - Mrs. Llde Mcrriwether, President, of Tennessee, presided. Upon the plat form, were seated Sirs. 'Judge Thompson, of llillsboro, Ohio, mother of the cru sado In 1883; Pundita Ramabai,':-Vice-President of thc World's W. C. T. U. t, TnIla: onrt nftipm of tlifi National Union. The hatt was decorated with beiu- tiful banners and flowers. Mrs. llannau Whitehall Smith, lately returned from England, opened too convention with a Bible reading on Love. Before the . ,t crowning event oi convention ansa wiitnrd'a annual address the entire front of the platform was lined with representatives oi mo press, as mo conclusion cf Ml.s Willard's addrcso, Mrs. Zerclda Wallace led iu prayer, and then followed tho introduction of dis tinguished visitors of Nashville, and Dr. Tanner, of Alabnma. Tho - afternoon session was opened with Scripture reed ing ana prayer, tue treasurers report showed a balance on hand in 1880 of Si R71t infill reeoints for 1887. 1.842: balance in the treasury, $3,55)3. In view of the encouraging financial condition of the National Woman's Christian Tem perance Union, the convention adjourned by singing, "Praise God from Wtiom All Blessings t low." DOINGS 09 ANARCHISTS. Peter Heldt, a prominent local anarch ist, snd Fred Gerhart, a traveling mr.gi cian, with anarchistic tendencies, were adjudged insane by a commission at In dianapolis, Ind. On the day of tho Chi cago hanging Heldt became a raving ma niac, and Gerhart believes that he is pur sued by a mob. Rev. H. C. Heisser tf tho East New York, NY., German Evangelist church, has resigned, owing to the faCt, ss he alleges, that some members of the church are anarchists and socialists. A gas pipe bemb filled with dynamite or guncotton was thrown into the Iowa iron works, in Dubuque; Iowa, at night and exploded. The building was set on fire but the (lames were extinguished bj the workmen. The theory is that the bomb was prepared by some one having a grudge against the works, or else an out and out anarchist. The house of In spector Anderson, of Orangevillo, Onta rio, was again blown up by dynamite; the charge was placed on the veranda at the front of the house, and two fr-.-nt rooms were badly shattered. Mrs. Anderson, who wss alone in tbe house was sitting beside a stove in the dining room and was badly shocked The inspector had just left tie bouse and was only about ten juris away when the explosion occurred. He was stunned by the concussion. Several Or angeville hotel keepers have been fined for violating the law during the past week, and it is a notable coinc dence that dynamite explosions always occur after the liquor mealbave bees fined for break ing tbe law. I' VOICE FUO.M PRISON. The Adeiter-Ze'Uung, ct Chicago, III., publishes a letter from Michael Schwab, written in the county full, the day U fore the execution of the annrchhts. The letter is printed under thj head in "Auirust Sides as man," but is dovi t.d to pioving that, while Si.iis and L'u.'g bad different iuess, tue editor, ncvir.uc less, had a h:gh opinion of the b iuib maker. Schwuu asserts that when Death' Wt.h OsUorn, informed Spiisnf Lingg's death, Spies burst into tears. The letter further says that whin FiiMen, Ppics and Sch an were taken to I lie jail horary, tho alternoon of the day before the uanx ing to bid good-by to their families, the trio were tn tue room tor luiiyiwonours, ia coinnao: with twotletmties; thnt cou versation naturally turned to Lingg's death, and "we all agrted that be was an extraordinarv man." Spies add: "Linsrii a as a man of strong principle and could not be frightened back from any idea that he had ondvt taken as principle, lie waa impelled bv bifih Ideas. John Brown was such a man. French revolution had its Dsnton and its Marat, and also the American revolution showed characters similar to Liugg." The Arbiter Zcit'tvg also publishes a letter aadresscd to the wife of Emrel. bv a certain showmm, offering her $10,009 for tho body of Lingg, the purpose Iwing to place it on exhibition in different cities throughout the United Stoles. PRETTY UviaV ri.IKTOTAXT. Imnnxm Aim 111 n fuinip wnrtt nt rvno mere iliol:ied front a re'iileiiee on Pine attest in Sr. Louis, Mo. In the windows of the residence' acre pictures of the executed Chicag anan h sis, nlsi framed Willi liH'K, TliCe m min is m mnrmm ft.M,n ir illli rril a rritwd ill tllU Vi cinity of the building, and thav tore dow n the fla,ta an I !. in ..e wninwa. m. n.... n.,iv flniiv.iviit. u It eeennil ho first Hwr, threw .brieh. piicsol gas . .... t i .1. . ....1 pipe amionier miwiiis in ; '" kiitwiilinM lni'il.i'j unsoie. Mm ss place! undir amut for diauiliitig the peace. ' -" :, . OCIALIT DOWM KAT. Tti flnrlnllst element amnntr the Gcr- urn stimulation of Adams. Mass.. is like ly to cause the removal of some mill o rativoa fnitn thst communil v. It dlmann Hall was occupied by a small parly of German ivicialists, wno were namnguru in Oorman by a few of tticii numwr, ani i1.aa Av,A riff mtttmnttn for sttilrh the Chi- cago anarchists were hanged were loudly applauded, SOOTflERN BRIEFS. READABLE ITEMS CAHT.TriLY GATHERED HITHER ASD ION, SlaelNl, Temperaaea and llrlllou Move- aeata-Flrea, Uealha and JSuleldaa-Kau-read Operations aad Improvement. Thcro Is much excitement at Salt Springs, Ga.", from the appearance of mad uo?i. . Three- have been killed in two days, aud many are expected to have hydrophobia.' William Hevward Adkinson. who at one time during th lata War was the private secretary of Gen. R. E. Leedied at Beech Island, in Aiken county, S. C. Mr. Adkinson was seventy years of ago. The reclatration of Atlanta, Ga., waa completed, and it was tho biggest ever shown in that city. In 1885 there were registered 8,860 votes lor tne promo tion election. This year the grand total reaches 11,140. The Elvton Land Company of Alabama recently declared a scrip dividend of $1, 200 per share equal to t welve hundred per cent. The stockholders are to issue bonds at six per cent for $3,500,000 to pay oa mis mviucnu. Georce M. Pullman, of palace cat fame, is in Birmingham, Ala., looking for a branch of his Pullman car works. The Elvton Land company has bought machinery for car works, which will have a capacity of ten ireignt cars per uay. A syndienfo of Northern and English capitalists has bought the .entire inter est of D. A. Appleton in tho city of Port Royal, S. C, and vicinity, and will at once build half mile docks and open di rect railroad communication witn Hir- mingham, Ala. The annual report of the railroad com. mission of Alabama shows that in that state for the vear endincr June 30, 1887, there wss an Increase of 180.01 miles of railroad. 251.72 miles of steel rails, of f 1, 847, 523,78 of gross receipts, of $511,- 102.60 of groa expenditures suq oi aioo, OSS of net receipts. The vetristration for the municipal election Closed at Charleston, S. C, with a rather a an tin? result, the total vote beiiiff 10.785. nsruinst 7.017 in 1883. The inrri'Hse is lanrelv in the neero vote. The white vote is 4.072. acrainst 4,517 in 1883. Tbe total white majority Is only 57, against 2,003 in 1883. About thirty anarchists held a meet inir in the room of a German barkeeper, and oriranized a lodae at Birmingham, Ala. The execution of their brothcraat Chicago was discussed, and ted not speeches were made.' The sentiment of the meeting was that the "judicial mur der" must be avenged. A maunificent private car for Gen. E. P. Alexander, president of the Georgia Ceutrul railway, is now building in tho company's stops in Macon, ua. n am finished it wi 1 be one of the finest cars in the United Stntcs. It is 74 feet lontr, Its cost will be nearly 23,00O. It will be completed in ten days, from now. The bronze statue of the late Chief Justice Taney bv Khinehnrt, presented to Baltimore. Md., Wm. T. Walters, was unveiled in Mount Vernon place in the presence of a large number of promi ucnt citizens. There were no ceremo nies attending tho event. . The statue was quietly unveiled by Master linger Urook Taney Anaersnn, a great grants son of the eminent jurist. Senator Vance, while ridinst in a road .-niton, on a narrow read leading to his residence, near Black Mountain, N. C, waa thrown out. and. faiiinironhis head. received a cut about three inches lonor reachinir to the bone. Dr. John A Watson, of Asheville. waa summoned by teWniph and reached the senator early the nit morning. He dressed tbe wound and left bim in a satinactory condition. The injury, though severe, is not aan gcrous. Widhalla, 8. C, was thrown into i state i f excitement by the acts of i drunken riotous mob. Going around to the middle of Main street, they spent their fury destroying tbe town lamps, teiritiir doan bridges, ctittinz and de stroying well roi cs and buckets and lev eling fences. Their depredations were stayed by tho timely discovery of the town authorities, who at once arrested the trincipal rioters, vix: Columbus Sccba, Junius Hooper and C. ti. Head, whom the olice placed behind the bars. The mnvor of Anderson. 8. C, ismak Ing It exceedingly hot for viohtors of the Prohibition ln in thnt city. Within the last two weeks, John O'Donncll, an ex-bat kicpt-r, bus beeu convicted five times of selling wlii-key, and Inrnrh case sentenced to jwy a imo l fH" nr wotk thiity days on the streets. About n dozen niero wses agn'nst O'lKmncll aiil be tiled. Th'rtccn other prisons have been convicted on the same ttiarga during the tt two weeks, their fines aggregating thiitcco bundled dollars. Five colored biliorers wn the intension of the Nasiiviltc, Florence & Sheffield Bail road wcti klllel by Mnjr buried in t mass ol rocks and earth, loosened by an explosion of charges of dynamite in a aide cut on a rad bi:d. The fata'Hy oc curred near Waj land springs, and w- s the result of a misunderstanding. The foreman had sent his hands a ay to a p!a c of safety, with orders not to return until be sent for them. He, with one oi to other hands remained to charge the hobs In the rocks and fire the fuses. By some misunderstanding five of his hands came Inch In the cut just below Use facing where the Minting aa ti Up, and In stantly tons .f lumldcri and cntth wrre burled In on them, burying tliein so that, they were nctgottco out lor forty-eight hoiirs . . BAcnKton's haul a wife, when ho lakes one. i IIB UAS CANCEU. . n - n i- J l ATOIS. jiergmunu, vturunruii uu xu bold, of Berlin, Germany, have adopted vue repori oi ai. muiuiav, iu nn extirpation of the crown prince's larynx U urged. The crown prince baa not yet accepted tho plan of treatment. .1 he KUi)m Journal says: Drs. Bergmannand Schmidt held lariigotmy is inevitable in a . It. ! tne case oi tr crown prince, iney maw- UllU lllB UOIUIUU bUUI lh TVUU1M MWU l.r.it,.f in nnrfnrm tli noeration months airo.and assert that the uelay uas lessened tho chance oi success, anuougu mey uu r.ot P uard tbe prince's recovery as im- ukl. A ffnr i tin pmnprnr received Dr. Schmidt, a .medical iConfcreuce was or dered at tue paUicc. 'mere were pres- cnt ptiysicians oi me uouuuuoiu, wivu Drs. Wergener, Bergmann, Gerhardt,To bold and Schmidt. Count Von Ilolberg. . . . .... , . ' 3 J 4 mimster ol tne uouseaoiu, presiueu. a. paper was unanimously signed, declaring thnt tho throat affection of the crown prince is cancerous and that a partial re- mnonl nl tll IfirVnZ 18 II O lOIlLItT UUTlDa- blo. Tho complete excision of the larynx : ...t..r, am' rMnmmfndMl bv the 11, IVH.1 1 V. V. .w " . .-. " J , physicians nt San Kcmo, but, in tne liioiHitnne, oujecieu 10 uj prince. It is reported mat tne crown prince, speaking oi mo urujiuKnt vji- tion on tnis turoat, sum: -a wuk the kaiser lives, I shall not submit to the operation. I prefer to let my old. father nave some iiojw, an j. wiu uo u al iening tho catastrophe by undergoing the dangerous operation." ONXY ONE I.ITTliE FLAG. As an incident of the Anarchist funeral in Chicago, 111., it was noticed thatatthi head of the procession marched a Grand Army veteran bearing a cheap Fourth ol July copy of the "stars and stripes, embluzoned with battles in which he had fought. This was the only flag displayed along the march. IU presence wai resented by the Anarchists, and thej appealed to tho police to prevent the vet eran from flaunting tbe stars and strlpei before the corpses of their brethren. For once the police would fain have obliged tlm Anarchists, but they dared not.- Th old roan shook his flag in the face ol anarchy and said he had braved death under its folds upon the field of battle, and he was prepared to die under it there. The polico started to preventthii (Trent to anarchy in the presence of its dead, but the crowd upon the sidewalk surged forward and cheering for the old veteran and tbe national emblem, forced the police back. COLORED PEOPtEfS PETITION. Ex-Congressman Jeff Long, a well irnnvn colored man. as a committee of one, representing the depositors in tho Freedman'a savings bank, presented a pe tition to Congressman Blout to forward to President Cleveland. The petition is the result of a scries of meetings lately held in Macoo. It ia very numerously signed by the depositors, and reads as fol lows: "Macos, Bibb County, Ga. To Ilia Excellency, the President of the United States of America : Sir, We, the undcrsigncd.depoiitorsin the Frcedmans Savings and Trust Company, being grate ful to you for your consideration of our necessities, i i recommending to Congress in your last annual mcsnsr.e an appropria tion sufficient 'to fully reimburse the de positors of that ill-fated concern, do here by petition you to remember us again in vour message to thai body. By so doing you will receive the earnest gratitude of your needy petitioners." BOV.NCED TUB ELDERS. j For several months past, two Mormon elders from Utah have been seeking converts in the portion of Alabama, near Birmingham, among the ignorant country people. They were very suc cessful, and have baptized a number of c inverts. White the two elders, Mower and Lee, were conducting a meeting in a log school hus', fifty armed men sur rounded the house, and dragged them from the pulpit. The mob carried them some distance in the woods, threatening to hang them, but finally released them on their premise to leave the county it once. Certain death was promised them if they ever returned. The two elders li ft the nclghlwrhood, leaving their con verts behind. EPIDEMIC I OHIO. In all the villases and through the farm ing districts of the Miami Valley, Ohio, as a result of the water famine, an epi demic of diphtheria and fevers prevail, and the further the investigation is ex tended the more appalling are the reports of the plague. At LcwUburg, where the death list ia the greatest, schools are closed and the children are forbidden to go ujwn tho streets. THOMiLt EVTRItNlimi. A meeting of the Land Leaguers was held hi front of Lisfarncy castle, Waterford, In land, the residence of Mr. Pine, M. P., for whose arrest a wartant ha been issued. Mr. Pine has taken it fug in the castle which he hss fortified and entrenched. He addressed the crowd through an ap erture in the castle. He bcastcd that the building was perfectly fortified and defied ths police to make an assault, BtPrilT JUTIOVtl, t'OXUttKosh Hie sixth annual niei ting f thi Bap tit National 4'ia;ftw. Itcg.-m its k--sions at Indiampoii, !t. Thu con n.u ! tint ,i ill ml r liiisim-ftH. but was I organized In order tint current oiies- lions might be di timed by its mcmlitrs. j The ftircmoid nteti of the denomination j participate In Its discussions, a a
Hillsboro Recorder (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 24, 1887, edition 1
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